Authentic voices. Remarkable stories. AOL On Originals showcase the passions that make the world a more interesting place.

Wake up to your world in 2 minutes.

Jews and Money. Asian Drivers. Polish IQ. CPT… that's racist! But where do these stereotypes come from? Comedian Mike Epps explores the backstories of this humor and how history and fact often distorts into a snide – but sometimes funny – shorthand.

"INSPIRED" features celebrities, visionaries and some of the biggest newsmakers of our generation, recounting the stories behind their biggest, life-changing moments of inspiration.

In a compelling series of verite encounters, Win Win provides unique access into the minds and lives of the world’s most-celebrated entrepreneurs and athletes.

Explore what it means to be human as we rush head first into the future through the eyes, creativity, and mind of Tiffany Shlain, acclaimed filmmaker and speaker, founder of The Webby Awards, mother, constant pusher of boundaries and one of Newsweek’s “women shaping the 21st Century.”

Nicole Richie brings her unfiltered sense of humor and unique perspective to life in a new series based on her irreverent twitter feed. The show follows the outspoken celebrity as she shares her perspective on style, parenting, relationships and her journey to adulthood.

Comedy is hard, but teaching comedy to children is hilariously difficult. Kevin Nealon is giving the challenge to some world-famous comedians. As these young minds meet with comedy’s best, get ready to learn some valuable comedy lessons, and to laugh!

James Franco loves movies. He loves watching them, acting in them, directing them, and even writing them. And now, he’s going to take some of his favorite movie scenes from the most famous films of all time, and re-imagine them in ways that only James can.

The story of punk rock singer Laura Jane Grace of Against Me! who came out as a woman in 2012, and other members of the trans community whose experiences are woefully underrepresented and misunderstood in the media.

Executive produced by Zoe Saldana (who will be the subject of one episode), a celebrity travels back to their hometown to pay tribute to the one person from their past (before they were famous) who helped change their life by giving them an over-the-top, heart-felt surprise.

Enter the graceful but competitive world of ballet through the eyes of executive producer, Sarah Jessica Parker. This behind-the-scenes docudrama reveals what it takes to perform on the ultimate stage, the New York City Ballet. Catch NYCB on stage at Lincoln Center.

Park Bench is a new kind of "talking show" straight from the mind of born and bred New Yorker and host, Steve Buscemi.

Go behind the scenes with some of the biggest digital celebrities to see what life is like when the blogging and tweeting stops.

In this lesson, let’s learn how to graph and describe rotations. We’re focusing on rotations as a transformation this time. We’re asked to draw an image of a polygon. The vertices are given to us. The coordinates are given to us. We need to graph the image after our rotation of 99 degrees counterclockwise. When we rotated about the origin as the center point and we also need to write the coordinates of its vertices after the rotation. It looked somewhat complicated but there’s a method to it. As you’ll see what I've done is I’ve taken a coordinate plane and I’ve done the simple part first which I already plotted the polygon (2, 2) is the point right here, (4,3), (4,5), (1,4). That wasn’t the difficult part anyway. I’ve just created the graph of the original polygon.

Now, what we want to do is we want to rotate it 90 degrees counterclockwise. Here’s how you do this. Let’s say this is point O, that’s (0, 0). That’s the origin where we have to rotate it. We need rotate it about the origin. So, let’s do this. Let’s draw a line and I'm going to actually use, let’s just green. I’m going to draw a line that goes from O to A which is the first point, it’s a light line.

Now, I want to draw a 90 degree angle and draw another line so that OA and OA' are of the same length. So the length of OA as you can see is diagonally two squares. Here it’s diagonally two squares as well and the angle between the two lines is 90 degrees. All I did was extend, join OA with the light line and draw a line (OA') which is exactly perpendicular to the first line OA and the same length. This becomes point (A'). I repeat this for OB. I’ve go to straight line here, 90 degrees.

Notice that this angle is also 90 degrees and this length is the same is the same as this length. So this becomes point B. Can you see what I’m doing? This is the point A, this is the point B similarly we have got to do with the point C which would be right here and point D would be here somewhere. Here. All right, yup, that’s about 90 degree, that’s a 90 degree.

Now you can see I’ve got four coordinates. All we did was fundamentally take a ABC and D and simply look at join the lines to the origin as long as we maintain our 90 degree and this link us to be same as the length before. This is a rotation in the counterclockwise direction by 90 degrees when I looked at the new vertices, the old vertex and the new vertex. Let’s write the values.

What did we have before? We had (2, 2), then we have B was (4, 3), C (4, 5) and D (1,4) what’s A hash or A dash? A dash is (-2, 2), B' is (-3, 4), C' is (-5, 4) and D' is (-4, 1). As you can see, there is a relationship between the original and the final place for this quadrilateral or for this polygon. What do you see? Because I rotated by 90 degree counterclockwise, the x-axis and the y-axis got flipped, (2, 3, 5, 4) as (2, 3, 5,4), (2,4,4,1) as ( 2,4,4,1) because that’s 90 degree counterclockwise, the x and y axis, the values got changed and the value of the x-axis is multiplied by 1.

That’s because we shifted from one quadrant to the other quadrant. As you can see all we did to transform this, right? In this case of rotational transformation was to make sure there was a 90 degree line, 90 degree because you were rotated by 90 degrees.

TenMarks is a new education initiative which aims to change the way kids learn. The company was founded by parents who believe that is a better way to help their (and all) kids build a strong foundation in math. The curriculum and the lessons are crafted and reviewed by experienced educators. The TenMarks educational advisory council guides the company to path-breaking innovation in education.